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mitigaties

Mitigaties is a term used in risk management to describe actions aimed at reducing either the likelihood of an undesired event or the severity of its consequences. They are part of the broader cycle of risk assessment, planning, implementation and monitoring. The goal of mitigaties is to lower overall risk to people, property or systems.

Mitigaties can be broadly categorized into prevention and protection. Prevention seeks to reduce the probability of

In practice, mitigaties are applied across sectors. In disaster risk management, examples include flood defenses, land-use

Evaluation of mitigaties involves assessing feasibility, cost and co-benefits, as well as potential trade-offs. Successful mitigation

a
risk
materializing,
for
example
through
safety
engineering,
quality
controls,
or
preventive
maintenance.
Protection
focuses
on
limiting
harm
if
an
event
occurs,
such
as
barriers,
redundancy,
emergency
planning,
training
and
resilient
design.
Some
approaches
also
aim
to
reduce
vulnerability
or
exposure,
making
systems
and
communities
less
susceptible
to
damage.
planning
that
avoids
high-risk
areas,
early
warning
systems
and
prepared
evacuation
plans.
In
public
health,
vaccination,
sanitation
improvements
and
disease
surveillance
mitigate
the
spread
and
impact
of
outbreaks.
In
infrastructure
and
industry,
measures
include
earthquake-resistant
construction,
reliable
power
supplies,
and
cybersecurity
patches.
In
climate
policy,
mitigation
refers
to
actions
that
reduce
greenhouse
gas
emissions
or
increase
sinks,
such
as
energy
efficiency,
renewable
energy,
electrification
and
carbon
pricing.
requires
ongoing
monitoring,
adaptation
to
new
information,
and
alignment
with
broader
goals
such
as
sustainability,
resilience
and
equity.